I personally don't mind very much grammar mistakes on internet comments or social media posts (Unless they are pretty blatant, or made the text confusing) since plenty of them are usually written on a rush, but I see the point Joanna Priestley is trying to make here, especially after reading some online claims (Made without a ounce of irony) about how demanding a minimum of basic grammar was some form of "elitism".
I don't want to sound pessimistic but things are probably becoming far worse in the upcoming years: Relying too much on the spell checker was one thing, but nowadays you have those artificial inteligence programs made to produce entire texts, most of them pretty nonsensical and sometimes filled with misinformation.
Better to laugh than cry, I guess. And this short certainly provides its share of good laughs.
I don't want to sound pessimistic but things are probably becoming far worse in the upcoming years: Relying too much on the spell checker was one thing, but nowadays you have those artificial inteligence programs made to produce entire texts, most of them pretty nonsensical and sometimes filled with misinformation.
Better to laugh than cry, I guess. And this short certainly provides its share of good laughs.